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Ribosomal Protein S3, a New Substrate of Akt, Serves as a Signal Mediator between Neuronal Apoptosis and DNA Repair

Authors
Lee, Sang BaeKwon, Il-SunPark, JihyeLee, Kyung-HoonAhn, YoungheeLee, CheoljuKim, JoonChoi, Soo YoungCho, Sung-WooAhn, Jee-Yin
Issue Date
17-9월-2010
Publisher
AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
Citation
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, v.285, no.38, pp.29457 - 29468
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume
285
Number
38
Start Page
29457
End Page
29468
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/115674
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M110.131367
ISSN
0021-9258
Abstract
RPS3, a conserved, eukaryotic ribosomal protein of the 40 S subunit, is required for ribosome biogenesis. Because ribosomal proteins are abundant and ubiquitous, they may have additional extraribosomal functions. Here, we show that human RPS3 is a physiological target of Akt kinase and a novel mediator of neuronal apoptosis. NGF stimulation resulted in phosphorylation of threonine 70 of RPS3 by Akt, and this phosphorylation was required for Akt binding to RPS3. RPS3 induced neuronal apoptosis, up-regulating proapoptotic proteins Dp5/Hrk and Bim by binding to E2F1 and acting synergistically with it. Akt-dependent phosphorylation of RPS3 inhibited its proapoptotic function and perturbed its interaction with E2F1. These events coincided with nuclear translocation and accumulation of RPS3, where it functions as an endonuclease. Nuclear accumulation of RPS3 results in an increase in DNA repair activity to some extent, thereby sustaining neuronal survival. Abolishment of Akt-mediated RPS3 phosphorylation through mutagenesis accelerated apoptotic cell death and severely compromised nuclear translocation of RPS3. Thus, our findings define an extraribosomal role of RPS3 as a molecular switch that accommodates apoptotic induction to DNA repair through Akt-mediated phosphorylation.
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